Labour MP Eric Joyce has been suspended from the Labour Party after he was taken from the Strangers Bar in the Commons and arrested by police on Wednesday night. Joyce allegedly headbutted a Tory MP and attacked several other Conservatives.

Joyce, who represents Falkirk for Labour, is alleged to have headbutted the Tory MP for Pudsey Stuart Andrew in the bar, which is reserved for MPs and their guests.

Joyce is thought to have attacked three other Conservatives and one Labour MP during the incident, which happened at around 11pm, three hours after the Commons had risen for the evening.

Labour said Joyce would be suspended until the police investigation into the incident was completed.

All the witnesses to the attack - most of whom are Members of Parliament - are due to give formal statements to police on Thursday afternoon. One witness to the fight told HuffPost UK that Joyce had headbutted Stuart Andrew after initially being pinned down by officers. It appears Joyce may have given officers the slip before attacking Andrew.

The Tory MP is said to be concussed after the headbutting incident but otherwise fine.

In the Commons on Thursday morning Speaker John Bercow said he was taking the incident "very seriously" and urged MPs not to discuss it in the chamber.

The bar had been busy, with the Speaker of the House of Commons in Canada, Andrew Scheer, among the guests invited there by MPs.

A Scotland Yard spokesman told the Press Association "We were called at approximately 10.50pm (on Wednesday) to reports of a disturbance at a bar within the House of Commons. A man aged in his 50s was arrested by officers on suspicion of assault. He remains in custody in a central London police station. Inquiries are continuing."

Following the incident Labour announced Joyce had been suspended from the party until the completion of the police investigation into the alleged assault.

Joyce, the MP for Falkirk since December 2000, served in the Army Education Corps before pursuing a career in politics.

From 2003 Mr Joyce served as a Parliamentary Private Secretary (PPS) to a number of government ministers.

Joyce quit as the PPS to Bob Ainsworth in 2009 due to his concerns over the war in Afghanistan. Prior to that he had been a parliamentary aide to John Hutton, including the period when he was defence secretary, Mike O'Brien and Margaret Hodge.

But perhaps drinkers in the bar should have seen it coming, as a tweet sent by the MP on 20 February in which he asked: "Who's the hardest boxing correspondent in the country? There's only one way to find out".

Andrew, who is said to be the victim of the assault, took to Twitter on Thursday morning to reassure people he was ok.

Eric Joyce found himself on the recieving end of a supportive Tweet from Tory MP Nadine Dorries:

It is also not the first time a MP has been involved in a fight in a House of Commons bar. Last year Labour's Paul Farrelly was involved in a brawl in the Sports and Social bar on the parliamentary estate.

Farrelly said he was acting in self defence after being confronted with a man who "took a swing" at him.